27 February 2016

Richard Ashcroft open to recording album with Noel Gallagher


The Verve singer speaks to NME for an exclusive interview in this week's magazine. 

The Verve frontman Richard Ashcroft has suggested that he would be open to working with Noel Gallagher, telling NME in a new interview: "in the future who knows what might happen."

Ashcroft speaks to NME in an exclusive cover feature in this week's magazine (available now, free in the UK).

Ahead of releasing new album These People on May 14, Ashcroft bemoaned the current state of the music industry, saying that he's "got no faith in it whatsoever."

He continued: "It’s sold itself up the river, stabbed people in the back instead of trying to create a good, solid British music alternative. Turn left for Cowell, turn right for this. The mainstream consumed our culture."

"You can get as many songwriters in a room as you want for your new talent show contest winner, it’s never gonna sound like a great Noel Gallagher song sung by Liam, it’s never gonna reach "Live Forever," it’s never gonna be [Verve song] "Lucky Man." We know that."

Last year, Noel Gallagher said he’d be interested in making an album with Ashcroft.

Asked whether he would work with Gallagher, Ashcroft replied: "It’s a great compliment for Noel to say something like that, and in the future who knows what might happen. I wish things like this would've happened years ago."

Ashcroft went on to speak of his fondness for his Britpop peers, saying: "Even the guys we had a bit of friction with, I look back and wish them luck. If I hear [Pulp frontman] Jarvis Cocker on the radio it gives me a good feeling. He’s waving a flag for culture from that time. We’re not stopping."

Ashcroft recently released new track "This Is How It Feels," which Liam Gallagher later praised.

Richard Ashcroft will play the following live dates:
- Manchester, Albert Hall (May 14)
- London, Roundhouse (May 16)

  • Source: NME, Luke Morgan Britton
  • Photo credit: Dean Chalkley

26 February 2016

Richard Ashcroft ditched phone to free himself

Rocker RICHARD ASHCROFT went without a cell phone for four years as he felt like a "slave" to the device.

 The Verve's former frontman has rarely been heard from in public since he stopped touring in 2011, and his reclusive habits extended to his personal life as he wanted to escape from his dependence on digital communication.

"I didn't have a mobile phone for four years," he tells NME magazine. "I'd become a slave to it, the amount of times you just find yourself wondering why you just opened that mobile device up. Are you actually doing anything or is it just a habit that's out of control?"

The Bittersweet Symphony singer's wariness of the modern world extends beyond his use of technology as he feels that western civilization itself may be on the brink of collapse.

"It's all coming to a head. The Ponzi scheme is about to burst," he adds. "When you build stuff on things that aren't real then it comes falling down."

"People are dealing with stuff that would have been deemed fantasy - madness that was a part of movies has become reality. We're getting news of an earthquake three seconds after it happened on the other side of the world."

"I don't think we were wired to empathize with the world's grief, we were wired to empathize with our tribe."

The rocker's new album These People, out 20 May, is apparently an expression of his mistrust of contemporary culture as he says, "I'm no activist - it's not a political record - but scratch below the surface of some of the stories presented as facts over the last few years and you come to the conclusion that we're being played on a big level."
  • Source: New Magazine

25 February 2016

Richard Ashcroft: A Legend Returns -- NME


The shamanic Richard Ashcroft fronted one of the most iconic – and successful – bands of the ’90s, The Verve. Then he went solo, then disappeared. After six years in the wilderness he’s back – and he’s pumped.

When rock stars disappear into their wilderness period, they might barricade themselves in remote drug shacks, suffer breakdowns in expensive celebrity rehabs or backpack around the world saving endangered mealworms. But few go as off-grid as Richard Ashcroft.

“I didn't have a mobile phone for four years,” says the conductor of ‘Bittersweet Symphony’, choirmaster of The Verve’s 10 million-selling ‘Urban Hymns’ and rock’s eternal cosmic question mark. “I’d become a slave to it,” he says. “The amount of times you find yourself wondering why you just opened that mobile device up. Are you actually doing anything or is it just a habit that’s out of control?”


Six years on from his last major interview and with barely a handful of solo acoustic shows under his belt since he stopped touring 2010’s critically maligned (but quite intriguing) rap-rock fourth album ‘United Nations Of Sound’, Richard is bursting out of the woods like a wolf attack. He arrives at this west London photo studio as if fresh from lobbing Molotovs – hair shaven, eyes shaded, scarf across his craggy features and jabbering like an enlightened monk finally breaking his vow of silence.

He is, after all, released from years of self-imposed solitary confinement in Josef Fritzl’s idea of a recording session. His brilliant new album ‘These People’, a slice of classic Verve song craft with modernist electronic touches, was pieced together in his home basement studio in bursts over the past six years, in between “being a dad and living a standard-ish kind of life with dogs and school runs”. Having discarded the distraction of his mobile, he tinkered at length with “new old keyboards”, learning new crafts and trying reinvent the looping melodicism of ‘Urban Hymns’. “With all the studios closing down, record sales hit massively, the whole industry changing, I had to re-evaluate how I could still create these super records,” he explains. “So [album track] ‘Out Of My Body’ is in the mould of ‘A Song For The Lovers’, ‘Bittersweet Symphony’, going right back. It’s a proper old-school record made with modern technology and old stuff to create something you've never heard before.” 


“I feel like I’m number one again, like I’m born again,” says a lyric in the title track. Is this a comeback album? 

“I don’t feel like it’s a grand return. That’s that sense of knowing when you’re through the storm. I've lost friends who weren't able to see it through those darkest points.”


Were you disheartened by the critical mauling of ‘United Nations Of Sound’?
  
“When you don’t have the band backing you up, people will take shots at you because they see you as weak. It’s very Darwinian. They see a solo artist, a guy who was in a band, as a fawn with a slight limp, when I’m actually stronger now. For a period around ‘Urban Hymns’, The Verve became a juggernaut and suddenly you’re the Emperor’s New Clothes. Once you leave that, people try to get in a few shots. I’m not vengeful, but a couple of people over the years have overstepped the line.”

What happens then?

 
“It goes straight back to the playground. Like, ‘If I ever see you, man, beware, because your name is etched there and I will find you one day.’ Years ago in a live review, a guy was almost threatening to put a bottle to me if he saw me in a bar. Unfortunately for him, I found him. He understood when he met me that you don’t idly make threats to someone like me. You might be able to do it to Chris Martin but not to me. A lot of the hate and negativity has been a great fuel for me. Unfortunately for my critics, with every negative ounce of frustrated sweat they put into that piece, it’s like wind in my fucking sails.”

Have you lost faith in the industry? 

 
“Oh yeah, I’ve got no faith in it whatsoever. It’s sold itself up the river, stabbed people in the back instead of trying to create a good, solid British music alternative. Turn left for Cowell, turn right for this. The mainstream consumed our culture.”

But surely the monster success of ‘Urban Hymns’, alongside Oasis, helped drive alternative into the mainstream? 

 
“But we do it better. You can get as many songwriters in a room as you want for your new talent show contest winner, it’s never gonna sound like a great Noel Gallagher song sung by Liam, it’s never gonna reach ‘Live Forever’, it’s never gonna be [Verve song] ‘Lucky Man’. We know that.”


Do you feel responsible for the current glut of singer-songwriters?
  
“I’d rather blame it on Neil Young. I’d hate it if I had anything to do with empty anthems. A lot of stadium rock now looks like the lighting guy wrote the song. But it’s a great time now to be a young songwriter because the tech allows you to have your own little record company, do your artwork yourself. Let the talent do what it does and we’ll always have great musicians in this country.”

Noel Gallagher recently said he’d be interested in making an album with you. Would you do it?

 
“It’s a great compliment for Noel to say something like that, and in the future who knows what might happen. I wish things like this would’ve happened years ago. Even the guys we had a bit of friction with, I look back and wish them luck. If I hear [Pulp frontman] Jarvis Cocker on the radio it gives me a good feeling. He’s waving a flag for culture from that time. We’re not stopping.”


Historically, when Richard Ashcroft would babble to the press about astral projection and feeling like Jesus, he was nicknamed ‘Mad Richard’. The tag still lingers thanks to a reportedly distant attitude that derailed the 2007 reunion of The Verve, and the afternoon in 2006 when he was arrested for turning up at a Chippenham youth club in a ‘dishevelled’ state, offering the kids £10,000 and the chance to write songs with him. But Richard, like so many other crap-cutting rock’n’roll truth seekers, has been dismissed as another quasi-spiritual rock crackpot. Instead, thanks to the determination of this self-proclaimed “clear thinker” to read around every news story for alternative viewpoints and not be “spoon-fed” media narratives on pivotal world events, ‘These People’ sweeps around some very real, very dark modern issues. Tortured nights, barbaric riots, lost friends, media lies, oppressive governments, global intolerance; this is perhaps the only album about the ongoing collapse of civilization that wouldn't ruin a Tinder hook-up.

“Over the period I wrote this record we've lived through incredible times,” Richard explains. “Highly contentious wars were going into the pot; grassroots movements turning into semi-revolutions; Tahrir Square [centre of the Egyptian Revolution riots in 2011]. It was kicking off all over the globe, people being divided. Pepper spray everywhere, tear gas.


“Whether it’s something to do with Syria or Ukraine, we, the people of this country, are being treated like fools. We no longer believe in the political process. We don’t believe in Punch & Judy democracy. I don’t believe in a left/right paradigm. I’m no activist – it’s not a political record – but scratch the surface of some of the stories presented as facts over the last few years and you come to the conclusion that we’re being played on a big level. That’s why one of the opening lines on the record is ‘Don’t go looking for your Watergate’. There was a time when a whistle-blower would have a Hollywood movie made out of them. Now someone who tries to tell the world of political or corporate misbehavior on a massive level finds himself on the run.”

Discussing the sorry state of the world with Richard is like standing in the eye of a tornado of ideas; reach out and grab a random soundbite and it makes sense, but it all spins by in a dizzying maelstrom of stream-of-consciousness pontification. Syria, political smokescreens, the NHS, “fake news”, Big Pharma and internet spy-trolls… you can only tune in to Radio Ashcroft and try to decode the ciphers.

“There’s a lot of pressure on people, young doctors,” he says. “It’s all coming to a head. The Ponzi scheme is about to burst. When you build stuff on things that aren't real then it comes falling down. People are dealing with stuff that would have been deemed fantasy – madness that was part of movies has become a reality. We’re getting news of an earthquake three seconds after it happened on the other side of the world. I don’t think we were wired to empathize with the world’s grief – we were wired to empathize with our tribe.”

So how do you feel about that ‘Mad Richard’ tag these days? He shrugs. “Great. If this world hasn't made you semi-mad then you ain't living in it. [When I got that nickname] it was my youthful exuberance being misread. I don’t believe in a new-age movement; I’m not a hippy. Maybe at the time I believed I could fly. I still believe. It’s a long way back down. I’m not going fucking anywhere.”


Do you feel any kinship with Kanye West? “Yeah. If you really, truly believe in something, you’re on fire and your tongue rolls at the same pace. A lot of his outrageous quotes, I believe, come from that. At The Verve’s first ever gig I said that we were gonna blow this local band off the stage. It was only in the local Wigan paper and they rang me to ask why I was being so aggressive. I just went, ‘Hey man, it’s like boxing. I’m just trying to sell a ticket.’ That side of my personality has always been there and that’s why I've been labeled arrogant. It’s not that – it’s because I see this as combative. I’m in a fight. It’s not all lovey-dovey, huggy fantastic. This is music, man. This is serious shit.”

These are but edited highlights, cupfuls of a torrent. Music’s mainstream “imposters” are providing “a Xerox of a Xerox of a Xerox of a Xerox”. The NHS is “designed to fail”. Our cities consist of isolated souls “moving kinetically around each other but in this silent dance of non-eye-contact”. We’re “on the last potential period of the human being as we've known it; this might be one of the last human records”. Richard Ashcroft is a raging brainstorm with no interlude. He’s back to share some of his wisdom. But is he back for good?

“I’m always in the wilderness. I’m always struggling to find something that stimulates me,” he says. “When you've been to the top of the mountain, where do you go? We have no barriers. There are no genres now – forget genres, forget it all, forget what you think you should sound like, forget it. Just tap into that spirit and do what you feel is right.”

And as suddenly as it arrived, the Radio Ashcroft signal is lost. This rare breed of enlightened rock motormouth is gone, mind whirling, still fighting, forever bereft of shadow. Off to hike back up the mountain.




  • Source: NME, article by Mark Beaumont
  • Photo credit: Dean Chalkley

Richard Ashcroft discusses new album

Richard Ashcroft has got one of those solo album things to share, his fourth, and the first since 2006. Titled These People, it’ll be released by his own Righteous Phonographic Association in partnership with Cooking Vinyl on 20 May.

The album is produced by longtime collaborator Chris Potter, and reunites the Verve man with string arranger Wil Malone, with whom Ashcroft has worked several times before, most recently on his 2000 debut solo album Alone With Everybody.

Of the new album, Ashcroft says: “Some personal and world events take a darker turn, leading to a sense of urgency and clearing of the mind. My lane in the chaos becomes clearer. To be a modern day troubadour, to play a set of songs in front of 30,000 Mexicans all singing back with six strings and one voice – this influences the final stages of the new album”.

And as if that wasn't clear enough, he adds: “To do nothing would be a crime – this sick nihilistic age of war. The line has been drawn – who are these people?”

22 February 2016

Richard Ashcroft returns with new single, announces new album out in May

Today, Richard Ashcroft kicked off the campaign for his upcoming studio album by confirming the album's title, lead single, release date and cover. The new album, These People, will be released on May 20, 2016 through the Righteous Phonographic Association label via Cooking Vinyl Records.

Coming nearly 6 years after United Nations of Sound, the 10-track effort will be Ashcroft's fifth solo album. It was recorded with Adam Phillips (guitar), Anthony Gorry (keyboards), Steve Sidelnyk (drums), and Damon Minchella (bass), and produced by Richard Ashcroft and longtime collaborator, Chris Potter, with string arrangements by Will Malone.

These People can be pre-ordered on Amazon, iTunes, and Richard Ahcroft's Official Store. The track-listing is:
  1. Out Of My Body 
  2. This Is How It Feels 
  3. They Don't Own Me 
  4. Hold On 
  5. These People 
  6. Everybody Needs Somebody To Hurt 
  7. Picture Of You 
  8. Black Lines 
  9. Ain't The Future So Bright 
  10. Songs Of Experience 
The first single from the album, "This Is How It Feels," is available from today to download from Amazon UK and iTunes UK, stream on Spotify, and can also be previewed below or on Vevo. More details will be posted as they become available. Richard Ashcroft's website is now live.

Liam Gallagher praises Richard Ashcroft for new solo track 'This Is How It Feels'

The Verve frontman will release new solo album 'These People' in May

Liam Gallagher has spoken positively of Richard Ashcroft's new solo track following the announcement of The Verve frontman's forthcoming new album.

Ashcroft will release his fourth solo album These People on May 20, today revealing his new track "This Is How It Feels."

Oasis singer Gallagher has since taken to Twitter to say that it's "good to hear" Ashcroft again after a six year absence.

"New tune sounding good," Gallagher added.

As previously reported, Ashcroft describes his new LP in a cryptic statement as concerning "some personal and world events [taking] a dark turn leading to a sense of urgency and a clearing of the mind."

The album, his first since 2010's United Nations Of Sound, was recorded largely in Ashcroft’s basement home studio and features orchestration from Wil Malone, who worked with Richard on The Verve’s A Northern Soul and the ten million-selling Urban Hymns as well as his 2000 debut solo album Alone With Everybody.

The album tackles topics such as the war in Syria, the Arab Spring uprisings and the death of a close friend because, as Ashcroft’s statement reads, "to do nothing would be a crime in this sick nihilistic age of war". The singer also claimed he had been "experimenting with old and new equipment trying to find new textures and sounds to accompany an ancient art" and credited last year’s spate of acoustic shows in Mexico, Zurich and Bilbao for helping him realize "my lane in the chaos becomes clearer – to be a modern day troubadour".

Ashcroft told NME: "Over the period I wrote this we've lived through incredible times. Highly contentious wars were going into the pot. There were grassroots movements that were then turning into semi-revolutions, there was Tahrir Square. There was everything kicking off all over the globe, people being divided. Pepper spray everywhere, tear gas... We’re in a very nihilistic age, we’re in death-ridden, world war times and I like to reflect the society we’re in but I also wanna possibly project something that gives us a sense of hope."
  • Source: NME

Richard Ashcroft Returns: "I Know How Good I Am"

The former Verve frontman is back with a new single, This Is How It Feels. He tells Radio X's Vernon Kay that his comeback is a "call to arms." 

Richard Ashcroft is back with brand new single, "This Is How It Feels," and it's safe to say he's feeling pretty confident about it.

The Northern Soul caught up with Radio X's Vernon Kay for a chat about his fourth album, "These People," and he insisted we won't be getting the "hard sell" when it comes to his new music.

He said: "If you don't feel it, that's fine. That's cool. I'm not going to give you the hard sell. You won't see me desperately trying to twist your arm. "I know how good I am!"

He added: "It's gonna be some of the best songs that I've ever written, so I'm excited for it."


THE WORLD ACCORDING TO RICHARD ASHCROFT

ON THE STATE OF THE MUSIC INDUSTRY AND POPULAR CULTURE: "It's a unique period in artistic history where there's so much at our disposal."

ON DIGITAL MUSIC: "The process of going through the digital transition has been difficult in a way, because of the hunter-gatherer element of music. The real hunger for music dissipated for me for a while and I had to almost re-find that love for it."

ON MAKING MUSIC FOR THE RIGHT REASONS: "Hats off to anyone over the last 20 years who's been doing it for the right reasons and anyone who's trying to stretch it a little bit in the right direction."

ON TALENT SHOWS: "At the end of the day, there always should be an alternative to queueing up in the rain and having four people who haven't written a good song in their lives telling you if you're good, bad, ugly or what... and also taking your publishing, taking your next x amount of years." 

FIGHTING TALK: "Anyone who's got a bit of talent from any walk of life needs to stand up now because there's so much negativity and nihilism out there."

ON "FAKES": "The battle lines are drawn now. You're either doing it or you're not. You're either a fake or you're not. You're the real thing and you're making music."

The Song For The Lovers star also revealed we can expect an "uplifting" and "moving" sound and even teased there may be another "few albums" in the works.

"This Is How It Feels" drops on 1 April, with the album being released via Ashcroft's Righteous Phonographic Association label on 20 May. "This Is How It Feels," is now available as an instant grat when you pre-order These People and for purchase/to stream on digital outlets.